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Oct 17, 2012
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it also means being able to identify locally and not only through the internet. internet is nice, but it gives a very deceptive approach of what people are doing, you know? and i know it's, again, the social media doesn't make revolution. education makes revolution. urban middle class makes revolution, not the social media. and for that we need to be more aware of indicators emerging and who is doing what now in these different civil societies. and for that i think that the need is better understanding to be able to bring in skills. people in this part of the world, and i will finish really on that, um, are admiring the u.s. for its capacity of education, for its capacity of entrepreneurship. i do not -- i mean, of course we can bring entrepreneur from the middle east to visit the u.s. or vice versa. it doesn't create the positive cross-pollination with state institution. how do we make this work? and this would be a very important way to build more secure societies. because as we know, democracies do not fight each other. so what i'm lining up here is some eleme
it also means being able to identify locally and not only through the internet. internet is nice, but it gives a very deceptive approach of what people are doing, you know? and i know it's, again, the social media doesn't make revolution. education makes revolution. urban middle class makes revolution, not the social media. and for that we need to be more aware of indicators emerging and who is doing what now in these different civil societies. and for that i think that the need is better...
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Oct 16, 2012
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the local process or explain why they refuse to investigate and report his background. i urge you to go online, look at these facts for yourself, google it and you'll be as appalled and outraged as i am. >> moderator: we are under way. time to get onto the questions and answers. erica felci coming of the first question today. >> thank you. dr. ruiz, you got to voters that will vote to never cut medicare or social security. not once, not twice, never appeared at many experts and even officials under the about administrations have argued the existing programs are fiscally unsustainable. do you think you're being disingenuous to voters when he promised not to support any cuts? and if you hold true to your pledge, hollister thing to to see the programs? ruiz: i appreciate that question, but ms. bono mack made some very, very strong accusations during her opening statement. i want to say my mother makes a wonderful thanksgiving turkey and i would love to invite you to our thanksgiving celebration this year. you see, what is shameful congresswoman bono mack is your calling me
the local process or explain why they refuse to investigate and report his background. i urge you to go online, look at these facts for yourself, google it and you'll be as appalled and outraged as i am. >> moderator: we are under way. time to get onto the questions and answers. erica felci coming of the first question today. >> thank you. dr. ruiz, you got to voters that will vote to never cut medicare or social security. not once, not twice, never appeared at many experts and even...
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Oct 18, 2012
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that's done on the local level. i would like local control. i think there are some federal programs that do work. i was a volunteer reading tutor for 10 years at an elementary school in the chapter one reading program. this title one reading was for students who came from low income families and needed extra help. so i would tutor them one-on-one and the money for that program came from the federal government. so i can see some of the programs work really well but i like control to be at the local level. >> quick follow-up, if i may, paula. do you support, do you think race to the top and no child left behind are working? why or why not? lingle: i think it remains to be seen if race to the top will work here in hawaii. it was my office that worked with the department of education to secure the $75 million that we got. mark anderson from my office was the liaison with the department of education and it was the stem, the robotics programs, that the feds really liked a lot. so i do think it has the potential to work but it remains to be seen. >>
that's done on the local level. i would like local control. i think there are some federal programs that do work. i was a volunteer reading tutor for 10 years at an elementary school in the chapter one reading program. this title one reading was for students who came from low income families and needed extra help. so i would tutor them one-on-one and the money for that program came from the federal government. so i can see some of the programs work really well but i like control to be at the...
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Oct 30, 2012
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the fight remains local and regional. again, as we see this years and the sunni crescents collide, they are colliding in syria. they are part of a growing arab cold war and the arab spring. [inaudible] >> in the wake of the arab spring, [inaudible] for many domestic reasons, it is time to keep those problems out of the theater of [inaudible] at the moment. and pressurization of the nuclear issue in enron. finally, it's crescent goes from israeli. in the wake of the recession. and it is based on [inaudible] the people are so much closer to them than anyone around. now, i would say this is egypt [inaudible] in many ways is quite attractive and it is politically experienced in the condition of having been where it actually knows that opposition is no longer in the opposition. will they adopt an extremist agenda now that they are in power? as hosni mubarak one must? >> is keeping the arrangement with israel. he is very statesmanlike. he has invited saudi arabia and iran to negotiate together over syria. those four players, it
the fight remains local and regional. again, as we see this years and the sunni crescents collide, they are colliding in syria. they are part of a growing arab cold war and the arab spring. [inaudible] >> in the wake of the arab spring, [inaudible] for many domestic reasons, it is time to keep those problems out of the theater of [inaudible] at the moment. and pressurization of the nuclear issue in enron. finally, it's crescent goes from israeli. in the wake of the recession. and it is...
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Oct 18, 2012
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kitv 4 will begin coverage of our local race at 6:00 that night. on behalf of kitv 4 news and civil beat.com, thank you, aloha and good night. >> and we have more campaign 2012 coverage coming up live here tonight on c-span2. we go to phoenix for a debate between candidates vying for a seat in arizona's new ninth congressional district, democrat and former state representative key stint cinema is up against republican city council member vernon parker live tonight at 8:30 eastern here on c-span2. and live now to remarks from the former director of mossad, israel's intelligence agency. he'll give his perspectives on the israeli/palestinian conflict, also iran's nuclear program and the uprisings in syria and egypt. ephraim halevy has served in the no o sad for almost 40 years. this is just getting started. >> 2,500 people since its inauguration. um, jane harman, the president and ceo of the wilson center, will introduce today's speaker, efraim halevy, the former director of the mossad and former head of the israeli national security, and aaron miller
kitv 4 will begin coverage of our local race at 6:00 that night. on behalf of kitv 4 news and civil beat.com, thank you, aloha and good night. >> and we have more campaign 2012 coverage coming up live here tonight on c-span2. we go to phoenix for a debate between candidates vying for a seat in arizona's new ninth congressional district, democrat and former state representative key stint cinema is up against republican city council member vernon parker live tonight at 8:30 eastern here on...
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Oct 15, 2012
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during the scenarios are that there are some and a local problems. in the case of libya when the events of 2011 started and when the rebellion started in february of 2011, we found analysts here in d.c. rapidly trying to catch up and make up for lost time on libya. their reference they were drawing upon to understand political dynamics in libya or bookstore written 20 years ago and based on research that had been conducting 30 years ago and they've been scrambling to build up their knowledge base ever since. but in the same gap about algeria and the same misunderstanding to read a lot of the analysts that cover don't travel through the country. and they generate a certain perspective on what's taking place in the country from outside of it into that this is rarely produces problems and misunderstandings. i think a good example of that in the face of algeria is the understanding of why they didn't have an air arab spring. i'm not going to be labor that. dr. roberts covered it but there was this state that algeria didn't have a arab spring because they
during the scenarios are that there are some and a local problems. in the case of libya when the events of 2011 started and when the rebellion started in february of 2011, we found analysts here in d.c. rapidly trying to catch up and make up for lost time on libya. their reference they were drawing upon to understand political dynamics in libya or bookstore written 20 years ago and based on research that had been conducting 30 years ago and they've been scrambling to build up their knowledge...
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Oct 23, 2012
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so knowing the local leadership and understand that i think is very essential. anyone who spent time on the ground will acknowledge that. i think that the challenge, what marc was described, what you're alluding to, we call international darlings. greater proposal writing, have access to computers, we taken for granted. a lot of the rural areas don't have electricity. so know how to apply. i think the biggest challenge is how do you get those people involved? you have to find a way to bridge those groups with the international darlings. you can ignore one or the other because you need people to keep the financial records together. even if you go straight into the rural areas and give them funding, you can be legitimized, you can create a moral hazard and create corruption because it might not even be corrupt. they just do not handle money. the is a lot of technical issues. one of the things we try to do at usip is we work with people before they ever write the proposal. they can put in a concept, we will work back and forth can help develop the proposals. we tra
so knowing the local leadership and understand that i think is very essential. anyone who spent time on the ground will acknowledge that. i think that the challenge, what marc was described, what you're alluding to, we call international darlings. greater proposal writing, have access to computers, we taken for granted. a lot of the rural areas don't have electricity. so know how to apply. i think the biggest challenge is how do you get those people involved? you have to find a way to bridge...
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Oct 5, 2012
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there's still local concerns. number one they've taken a lot of our energy throughout the fall and focused on the voter suppression across the country and in pennsylvania. >> as opposed to registering people to vote. >> the same resources that we have, and number two, they are saying they can ask and there will be all this confusion. they can ask for the idea but they still allow the vote and the interpretation of how that is right place at the grass-roots level is something we have a lot of concern about. >> which means are any of your group's getting people to operate as watchers in the critical states to make sure that if that happens they will say i'm sorry you don't actually have to have the ideal vote. >> [inaudible] today i was having my coffee with the senate and told me what a beautiful scene -- >> the book on president lyndon baines johnson one of the three books -- >> in the context and the momentum starts by describing in the south with an african-american brothers and sisters have to go through just t
there's still local concerns. number one they've taken a lot of our energy throughout the fall and focused on the voter suppression across the country and in pennsylvania. >> as opposed to registering people to vote. >> the same resources that we have, and number two, they are saying they can ask and there will be all this confusion. they can ask for the idea but they still allow the vote and the interpretation of how that is right place at the grass-roots level is something we have...
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Oct 26, 2012
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did it really put more control in the power of local officials, teacher, and school boards? i have not met a single teacher that has said that. they said it put lists of requirements on us with no help to meet any of those things, and it took the creativity out of one of the greatest jobs in the world, teaching our children. ic -- i think we can do 3we9er -- belter than that in a way that supports our children, teacher, and new mexico schools. >> moderator: hitter? wilson: if there was 800 funds in federal law and couldn't use money to be for curriculum development in middle school math to help out with reading instruction in elementary school. what it gave was a lot of flexibility on any of those programs so the local school district could move money around. we want the schools to be accountable to the community for results. now, how the results were reported in hole issue of annual yearly -- ayp, annual yearly progress, i think was something that didn't work, and they were right to set that aside. we now have a different system here in new mexico, but the important thing i
did it really put more control in the power of local officials, teacher, and school boards? i have not met a single teacher that has said that. they said it put lists of requirements on us with no help to meet any of those things, and it took the creativity out of one of the greatest jobs in the world, teaching our children. ic -- i think we can do 3we9er -- belter than that in a way that supports our children, teacher, and new mexico schools. >> moderator: hitter? wilson: if there was...
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Oct 12, 2012
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because the new libya's very much about these deals at the local level. um, the -- and one way that i find libya's very different, and it was touched on this morning s that libya has kind of an anti-islamist thing going on. ya brill's party did get 39 of the 80 seats, his group, and 18 went to the muslim brothers, and t backlash in benghazi and other things, basically, every young person i met in libya voted for ya breel. so there's a very different die namic. libya's the only country where positive views of america are higher than negative views. it's most comparable to iran in terms of views of the united states. so there's a very different dynamic on the world vis-a-vis western intervention, vis-a-vis islamism notwithstanding what we're seeing in the news. and i that thought the uprising in benghazi was hugely important to think about when 30,000 people rose up a couple of weekends ago to throw out islamist militias. the population once again taking control of a situation where a dysfunctional government wasn't able to. and i found the intervention ver
because the new libya's very much about these deals at the local level. um, the -- and one way that i find libya's very different, and it was touched on this morning s that libya has kind of an anti-islamist thing going on. ya brill's party did get 39 of the 80 seats, his group, and 18 went to the muslim brothers, and t backlash in benghazi and other things, basically, every young person i met in libya voted for ya breel. so there's a very different die namic. libya's the only country where...
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Oct 3, 2012
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not just presidential, but on some of these down ballot races, you have the real potential to move local action with false information like that. and because it is coming from super pack, less accountability because his people for a better tomorrow. not my opponent saying it. you can't limit directly on the opponent. and i wonder if at the end of this race when we look back on the ads were run in the final weeks, we don't see some pretty slimy as coming out of these outside groups. >> one is the tv station as they consider if they're coming from an outside group and refused ads from a candidate. they almost never do although there have been a few instances and potentially those groups can be reliable -- [inaudible] that's the other thing. the liable barrier for a public campaign a public official, you can go pretty far in distorting someone's record. >> implicit in this conversation , something worth making explicit and that is we are used to races or candidates are broadcasting last time. there was a lot of press attention to how negative john mccain was being. so we surveyed all of our
not just presidential, but on some of these down ballot races, you have the real potential to move local action with false information like that. and because it is coming from super pack, less accountability because his people for a better tomorrow. not my opponent saying it. you can't limit directly on the opponent. and i wonder if at the end of this race when we look back on the ads were run in the final weeks, we don't see some pretty slimy as coming out of these outside groups. >> one...
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Oct 29, 2012
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the program works with local communities, with local businesses, not only to foster the idea -- the idea of innovation, but also to provide tools, actual tools for people to create new businesses, build a life for themselves and the economies that for a long time did nothing to promote individual entrepreneurship. for example, in our partnership with egypt's competitiveness program, we created an increase in outreach activities that just recently involved over 1200 students at public universities in cairo. additionally, this program helped develop in a short time 35 startups, 12 of which we have funded. in december, and this is something that i would encourage you to keep -- to put attention to, in december, we'll be collaborating with the uae to have the third summit in dubai. the last two have attracted over a thousand entrepreneurs, and the one in dubai attracts over, we believe, even more entrepreneurs, investors, and government representatives from the region to create a better environment in which entrepreneurship can flush irrespective. -- flourish. another vehicle to promote entr
the program works with local communities, with local businesses, not only to foster the idea -- the idea of innovation, but also to provide tools, actual tools for people to create new businesses, build a life for themselves and the economies that for a long time did nothing to promote individual entrepreneurship. for example, in our partnership with egypt's competitiveness program, we created an increase in outreach activities that just recently involved over 1200 students at public...
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Oct 18, 2012
10/12
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one, it also means being able to identify locally not only through the internet. the internet is nice, but it is a different approach of what people are doing. and again, the social media doesn't make resolution. education makes revolution. middle class mix revolution not the social media and for that we need to be more aware of the indicators emerging and who is doing what now in this different civil society, and for that i think it is a better understanding to be able to bring new skills. people in this part of the world and i will finish on that. admiring the u.s. for its capacity of its dictation and a entrepreneurship. of course we can bring entrepreneurs from the middle east to the u.s. and vice versa. it doesn't create the positive cross pollination. how do we make this work? this would be a very important way to feel more secure as a society because as we know, democracy doesn't fight each other. so, what i am lining up here is some elements are more long-term approach which may be very frustrating especially a type of election, but in the long run, the as
one, it also means being able to identify locally not only through the internet. the internet is nice, but it is a different approach of what people are doing. and again, the social media doesn't make resolution. education makes revolution. middle class mix revolution not the social media and for that we need to be more aware of the indicators emerging and who is doing what now in this different civil society, and for that i think it is a better understanding to be able to bring new skills....
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Oct 9, 2012
10/12
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murdoch's headline writers my say, local boy makes good. [applause] mr. murdoch, as you all know, took a newspaper business from down under up and over the competition to make news corporation a truly global business. for him the headline might be media mogul routes rivals. well, his international perspective on the intersection of business and immigration will be fascinating to hear. to moderate the discussion we are pleased to welcome. the assistant managing editor and executive washington editor of the "wall street journal", also writes a column in the "wall street journal" a couple of times a week. capital journal. terrific, terrific, terrific reading. people often say to me, how do you know what you know? and i say, i've read gerry. that is the reason. so to get things going i am pleased to introduce another talented and accomplished chief executive who is also a member of the partnership for new american economy. our good friend, well-known to all, the mayor of this great city, the hon. tom bonino. [applause] >> you want to -- >> this is the mayor c
murdoch's headline writers my say, local boy makes good. [applause] mr. murdoch, as you all know, took a newspaper business from down under up and over the competition to make news corporation a truly global business. for him the headline might be media mogul routes rivals. well, his international perspective on the intersection of business and immigration will be fascinating to hear. to moderate the discussion we are pleased to welcome. the assistant managing editor and executive washington...
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Oct 5, 2012
10/12
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to what i find being cities and local politics and local institutions are on opportunity. human potential your closest to the human potential access you can touch that, you can shape the lives of so many people in particular young people in respect of the view is that we hold about young people and irrespective of the realities with respect to their voting the reality is the you cannot escapes this. they are the electorate. 20 years from now they will be the older demographic. they will be the adult, the grown-up. it's a marvel to me that this hasn't sort of dawned upon all levels of politics and for me i think that opportunity exists with a local level and to be sitting on the stage with folks that sort of have done what i could aspire to and have great passion for. and sort of a mild electric i would say that chuck schumer selected as one of the people there and it's the fact that he forgot that -- >> he didn't forget it. he let me know by the week. [laughter] he said the fed is not so tough. just out of law school. >> that's right. so, anyway. you lost me at harvard. >>
to what i find being cities and local politics and local institutions are on opportunity. human potential your closest to the human potential access you can touch that, you can shape the lives of so many people in particular young people in respect of the view is that we hold about young people and irrespective of the realities with respect to their voting the reality is the you cannot escapes this. they are the electorate. 20 years from now they will be the older demographic. they will be the...
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Oct 3, 2012
10/12
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you cannot congressional level, usn local community may. people wonder how that will move going forward. it's the first or they've been tremendously about. in my opinion had a dramatic effect on what happened in terms of extending it. i was the first time that happened. is that these gentlemen are doing to try to figure it out. there is no playbook. it's the first time there's been that much change going on on the side of things. it's kind of an overview of where we go. talk about campaign finance reform initiatives and near ruin opinions and questions as well. who set the stage by lenny gentlemen talk about projects and then we'll go into discussions. >> jeff, what to with we do and understand, this entire room has no familiarity with these kinds of vehicles. give us a sense of the pro-obama factor which are a strategist practitioner and tell us how it functions among others come together and how did they get funded? was the mission and priorities u.s.a. and if you could give us a sense of the message strategy and planning that goes on and
you cannot congressional level, usn local community may. people wonder how that will move going forward. it's the first or they've been tremendously about. in my opinion had a dramatic effect on what happened in terms of extending it. i was the first time that happened. is that these gentlemen are doing to try to figure it out. there is no playbook. it's the first time there's been that much change going on on the side of things. it's kind of an overview of where we go. talk about campaign...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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think your local college professor. you know, think the driver of the crazy car with all of the bush is hitler bumper stickers on the back of the car. think the gender studies wearing the head band at your local whole foods store. you get the picture; right? they no , nominate professions leaving a cultural imprint, cultures like journal ism, arts, academia, and america's fastest band of intertapers, circumstance day sew lay success bats. who are these people who call themselves liberals? how does such a small group impact our lives? what motivates them? i'm in an excellent position to answer the deep questions because i've been watching liberals closely for over 30 years, studied liberals like jane goodall studies her chimps. [laughter] in their natural habitats and without judgment, in silence mostly because we barely speak the same language. i've been tireless in research. i lived with liberals, broke bread with them, humored them, teased them, prodded them, and, yes, even loved some of them, some my friends, and som
think your local college professor. you know, think the driver of the crazy car with all of the bush is hitler bumper stickers on the back of the car. think the gender studies wearing the head band at your local whole foods store. you get the picture; right? they no , nominate professions leaving a cultural imprint, cultures like journal ism, arts, academia, and america's fastest band of intertapers, circumstance day sew lay success bats. who are these people who call themselves liberals? how...
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Oct 15, 2012
10/12
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and i believe that local decisions should be supported by local funding. that's where the property tax comes in. but i also believe in targeted aid which is why i support a reversal of the claremont decision that has really destroyed local public policy making for education as well as local funding and destroyed the opportunity for the state to provide for targeted aid to help our cities and towns in that area. and then we need full funding of special education and other mechanisms that will lower the property tax burden. but in the end it's a decision made by the decision makers in the cities and towns about how much they spend. >> moderator: do you have a follow? >> mr. lamontagne, specifically, do you have a plan to provide property tax relief to new hampshire residents? lamontagne: first of all, i do, and i think what it is is bringing back economic recovery to new hampshire. as goes economic recovery, so will go more revenues for state government, for example, and local communities in terms of broadening the tax base. that is the way it works. and the
and i believe that local decisions should be supported by local funding. that's where the property tax comes in. but i also believe in targeted aid which is why i support a reversal of the claremont decision that has really destroyed local public policy making for education as well as local funding and destroyed the opportunity for the state to provide for targeted aid to help our cities and towns in that area. and then we need full funding of special education and other mechanisms that will...
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Oct 19, 2012
10/12
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i think education is under the local level. the local school boards would do a better job of that. clearly, clearly we need competition. competition makes everything better. it makes it more efficient. higher education, the envy of the world, and the major reason is competition. there's a jillion schools out there and lots of competition. we need competition in k through 12 and we'll lead the world there, too. moderator: mr. mueller. mueller: i'd like you to imagine you were running a big university and you were told no matter what you charge, we have a bunch of taxpayers who are going to back up the loans to people, and we're going to let them go wild, charge 60,000, fine, we got it covered. we're going to give them those loans. what incentive is there for the universities to lower their costs? no. i think the evidence is clear. the universities are raising their rates much higher than the rate of inflation, and they're spending it on really awesome gyms, and really nice campuses. i just got out of school, so i'm well aware of this. the gyms -- i could have trained to be an olympi
i think education is under the local level. the local school boards would do a better job of that. clearly, clearly we need competition. competition makes everything better. it makes it more efficient. higher education, the envy of the world, and the major reason is competition. there's a jillion schools out there and lots of competition. we need competition in k through 12 and we'll lead the world there, too. moderator: mr. mueller. mueller: i'd like you to imagine you were running a big...
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Oct 11, 2012
10/12
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today is the annual peter endowed forum on local politicking. peter was a long time and much beloved city club member. he was a member for more than fifty years. joining us at the head table today is paul -- [applause] [applause] >> thank you and with the announcements. i'll turn the podium back over to mike for and the audience for questions directly from the audience. it will be moderate by mike. let's have the first question. >> moderator: before we take the question, i want to make thed a mo nation we would love this to be in the form of a question. and i know that many of us here would have come to support your candidate might have comments to make as well. i implore you to ask a question. we're not going to be having any tacks or speeches here from the audience. we would love to hear from the full house and let's have our first question. >> good afternoon and thank you for coming. i would ask both of you to comment on this please. i am the owner of a small manufacturing with 62 employees. i have been excluded from all the small business de
today is the annual peter endowed forum on local politicking. peter was a long time and much beloved city club member. he was a member for more than fifty years. joining us at the head table today is paul -- [applause] [applause] >> thank you and with the announcements. i'll turn the podium back over to mike for and the audience for questions directly from the audience. it will be moderate by mike. let's have the first question. >> moderator: before we take the question, i want to...
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Oct 24, 2012
10/12
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as mayor, federal laws are -- were enforced by the local police, and vice versa. if a federal law enforcement official saw something that was a local law passed, they have the authority to pull the person over. there's got to be cooperation whether it's a federal bank robber, local police help with that, and vice versa i do think that i'm a big strong supporter of the 287g program. in fact, i supported sheriff's efforts in our county to use the 287g program because one of the problems we're having right now with the illegal immigration two-fold. one is we do not know the identity of many people in our state because they have four to five to six different forms of identification, and what the 287g program did was make sure if we arrested someone, your sheriff arrested someone, we can find out who they were due to federal crime records. the 287g program is very important. i'm very disappointed our current president is discouraging the implementation. i think the president is wrong on that issue, and i hope that changes. >> moderator: we're going to get into a lightn
as mayor, federal laws are -- were enforced by the local police, and vice versa. if a federal law enforcement official saw something that was a local law passed, they have the authority to pull the person over. there's got to be cooperation whether it's a federal bank robber, local police help with that, and vice versa i do think that i'm a big strong supporter of the 287g program. in fact, i supported sheriff's efforts in our county to use the 287g program because one of the problems we're...
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Oct 9, 2012
10/12
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eye 114
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localization. they've figured out you don't actually need to sell american style cheeseburgers and sodas to kid in india or indonesia to make millions and they very smartly customized and on local with food that appeals to local can dumars. donald's hair may be the target of our obesity campaign, may be asserted the obsession with sort of american yuppies. but globally, it still means the middle-class good life it has been a big winner. in tough economic times, makeup well-documented economic research to support this fact. and just look at the sales of l'oreal or other big consumer makeup companies and is quite astonishing to that effect. and of course there's incites the extremists, political extremists, which unfortunately look at the rise of the extreme far right and far left parties is not just in greece where that's happening, but here in the united states as well. >> host: susan glasser, editor-in-chief of foreign policy. thanks for coming. >> guest: thanks for having me. >> a quiet overpass
localization. they've figured out you don't actually need to sell american style cheeseburgers and sodas to kid in india or indonesia to make millions and they very smartly customized and on local with food that appeals to local can dumars. donald's hair may be the target of our obesity campaign, may be asserted the obsession with sort of american yuppies. but globally, it still means the middle-class good life it has been a big winner. in tough economic times, makeup well-documented economic...
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Oct 10, 2012
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we subcontracted with a local ngo that does are pulling in the region. and the results of the poll were pretty interesting. of course there was a great deal of hostility to president obama. at the because of the drones. it was a great deal of facility to u.s. military activity. there was also very little support and not much for the taliban. one of the questions we asked, if they were on the pole in an election in your area, would you vote for them? think the answer was less than 1% in both cases. so the picture that emerges is hostility. after all, nothing quite like living under the taliban to have a healthy skepticism about their plans are producing utopia. and also a real dislike of u.s. military activity in the region. i think that as i have been thinking about the drone program, christopher mentioned this issue of national sovereignty. i think at the end of the day naturally the issues that make people oppose this, the perception of civilian casualties with the actuality, that is part of it. the where canada had a drone program where there were tak
we subcontracted with a local ngo that does are pulling in the region. and the results of the poll were pretty interesting. of course there was a great deal of hostility to president obama. at the because of the drones. it was a great deal of facility to u.s. military activity. there was also very little support and not much for the taliban. one of the questions we asked, if they were on the pole in an election in your area, would you vote for them? think the answer was less than 1% in both...
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Oct 3, 2012
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important, and i want you to drive it because so much of it has to do with our public lands and attitudes locally that will help me help you in making this unreality. i think engaging, harnessing, and even asking for the help of the nation's governors. so typically me with the present once or twice a year and you get briefings as opposed to the present thing i need your help, please go out into the. i need help on health care 2014 is run the country. wing-ism clarity, your help. i need help on energy policy. here's the broad framework. let's help to fill in the gaps and make it a national effort, if you will. i think there's huge untapped potential in that area that could speak to bipartisanship. >> i agree with the. i think the biggest policy achievement probably the last 20th minute and welfare reform. 25 years i guess. now, 15 years, 96. that was done by clinton, begrudgingly accepted after modifying its on the other governors have a huge role in that a thing. angler, thompson, underpublicized and a couple democratic governors. so i think you could imagine that, if you can do serious health re
important, and i want you to drive it because so much of it has to do with our public lands and attitudes locally that will help me help you in making this unreality. i think engaging, harnessing, and even asking for the help of the nation's governors. so typically me with the present once or twice a year and you get briefings as opposed to the present thing i need your help, please go out into the. i need help on health care 2014 is run the country. wing-ism clarity, your help. i need help on...
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Oct 4, 2012
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i'm going to vote on my local election. go to the polls and vote for the local election and then they will not vote for the president because it doesn't matter who they vote for. >> i wish my colleague were here because this is an issue that is near and dear to his heart that he has written a lot about. and i think that he would want me to just say that there are ways to address this without amending the constitution. there's a sort of way to do it by a congressional districts that he would explain much better. but yes, we have settled into a way of doing the electoral college, and maybe there are ways we can look at it. there are a couple of states that do decide their electoral votes. the problem is probably less electoral votes themselves and the winner-take-all in the state's. >> i think it would be helpful to a lot of folks because i don't think that there is a basic understanding and a lot of states in the middle one particular on what it means and why it is important. >> if i can talk about what it means to have them
i'm going to vote on my local election. go to the polls and vote for the local election and then they will not vote for the president because it doesn't matter who they vote for. >> i wish my colleague were here because this is an issue that is near and dear to his heart that he has written a lot about. and i think that he would want me to just say that there are ways to address this without amending the constitution. there's a sort of way to do it by a congressional districts that he...
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Oct 31, 2012
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of that model on their local offices. the key difference being both case managers and applicants don't have that face-to-face contact. the online application at a phone interview model, it also changes other communications. we had, for instance, the video clips running in waiting rooms. it's just that region as large an audience as it did in the past. but there are some strategies state and local governments can employ when adjusting to these new models. one is a real very straightforward as the messages we use to have an, or allowed in love in our local offices. those need to be out on the web in a format that can be accessible, either mobile or buy a desktop. and i think online application questions need to be reviewed carefully. both on the customer facing side and as they come back through the case manager or the agency side, on the backend. i think is the risk of not catching all the customers needs, you know, if the application forms so to speak don't have enough blanks i guess to fill in. my concern is we may lose
of that model on their local offices. the key difference being both case managers and applicants don't have that face-to-face contact. the online application at a phone interview model, it also changes other communications. we had, for instance, the video clips running in waiting rooms. it's just that region as large an audience as it did in the past. but there are some strategies state and local governments can employ when adjusting to these new models. one is a real very straightforward as...
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Oct 15, 2012
10/12
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similar efforts are underway across the tailored to local needs and conditions. and none of this is happening in a vac vacuum. the transition is occurring are linked as you well know with developments across the wider middle east. egypt, of course, the largest arab nation, corner stone of the region, we have seen the new elected leadership say that the success of egypt's democratic transition depends on building consensus and speak together needs and concerns of all egyptians, men and women of all faith and communities. now we stand with the egyptian people in their quest fur universal freedom and protection. and we have made the point that egypt's international standing depends both on peaceful relations with the neighbors, and also on the choice it is makes at home and whether or not it fulfills its own promises to the own people. in syria, assad regime continues to wage brutal war against its own people even as territory slips from the grasp. i recently announced major new contribution of humanitarian aid and assistance for the civilian open opposition and we
similar efforts are underway across the tailored to local needs and conditions. and none of this is happening in a vac vacuum. the transition is occurring are linked as you well know with developments across the wider middle east. egypt, of course, the largest arab nation, corner stone of the region, we have seen the new elected leadership say that the success of egypt's democratic transition depends on building consensus and speak together needs and concerns of all egyptians, men and women of...
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Oct 25, 2012
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the state, meanwhile, has shown itself able to contain local unrest, has largely dealt with internal insurgency, and appears able to avert opposition. what is it less equipped to deal with? what signs should we look for to suggest or not a coming shift in the status quo? do any algerians or individuals enjoy sufficient popular credibility they are in a position to influence events from outside the system? algiers leadership is poised for a significant transition. as they confront a shift that is taking place, as members of the revolutionary generation either retire or pass away having been the dominant force in politics for half a century that it's no secret aging and ill and widely expected not to run again when the term is up in 2014. he could even step down beforehand, and there's per sis tent rumors to that effect. the battle to succeed him is on among members of the political elite, but the outcome of that battle is certainly undetermined, i think, at this point. most observers expect the military to play some role in the choice of his successor, but the military's been subject
the state, meanwhile, has shown itself able to contain local unrest, has largely dealt with internal insurgency, and appears able to avert opposition. what is it less equipped to deal with? what signs should we look for to suggest or not a coming shift in the status quo? do any algerians or individuals enjoy sufficient popular credibility they are in a position to influence events from outside the system? algiers leadership is poised for a significant transition. as they confront a shift that...
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Oct 10, 2012
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no different than the corner store participate in the community in the local church that participates and gives people summer jobs, and we do that everywhere. we do it through the seventh largest organization in america in the $200 million a year. corporate social responsibility on environmental. we have programs for the global citizens issue which my friend started here which we are going to lots of cities to help them grow economically and create jobs and helping environment and we do tremendous amount of education. retired in the country retired for the hundred veterans this year and that 78 companies there's 20,000 veterans. they're giving homes which were under the veterans, as we try to participate. and to me it's a healthy vibrant company makes it possible. that income as possible, and that's why i turned to michael the time and if i don't make customers happy, they're is no -- i've never separated them. always invest in the future, take care of your own people and clients. let me go back to this issue one more time to read here is a question for you all. we have something like
no different than the corner store participate in the community in the local church that participates and gives people summer jobs, and we do that everywhere. we do it through the seventh largest organization in america in the $200 million a year. corporate social responsibility on environmental. we have programs for the global citizens issue which my friend started here which we are going to lots of cities to help them grow economically and create jobs and helping environment and we do...
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Oct 25, 2012
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local officials can be paid off by contractors for contracts that build roads, apartment buildings and so on. they may expropriate lands from farmers and turn it over to people who want to use it for economic development and get paid off along the way. and that points to a problem which i think is one that significant and needs to be kept in mind, and that is that corruption in the chinese system is endemic. and as we realize, as we saw illustrated, it penetrates to the highest levels of the chinese government. political reform is an entirely different question. it is not something, at least not in the ways that we would recognize it, that is on the table for discussion in china. people talk about democracy and the importance of increasing avenues for people to express their views, but when you look closely at what they're proposing, it's democracy within the party, some competition among small numbers for political office. it's not something that we would recognize as genuine political reform. so i think we need to be helpful and open, but we also need to be realistic. i remember when
local officials can be paid off by contractors for contracts that build roads, apartment buildings and so on. they may expropriate lands from farmers and turn it over to people who want to use it for economic development and get paid off along the way. and that points to a problem which i think is one that significant and needs to be kept in mind, and that is that corruption in the chinese system is endemic. and as we realize, as we saw illustrated, it penetrates to the highest levels of the...
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Oct 26, 2012
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vilsack: i said i'm very focused on the local and i am. i would start on the local. i said i saw the world and this district through the lens of a teacher. i see my job much the way i would on the first day of school with all the promise that entails tails. and i would like at these counties as 39 separate entities as many different communities. i would want to make sure that i helped each of them maximize their potential by creating jobs. i have spent the last year-and-a-half laying out my plan for layers of economic opportunity and you know i always carry my football with me, one of the things i talk about is creating another layer of bio economy and making things from what we grow within 10 or 15 miles from all the small towns. >> moderator: those watch us what would the football have to do? vilsack: the football is made of soybean. almost any car people drove up in came from destreets and seats are made from to product. there are plastic bottles from coca-cola or using cow manure to creates a fault. we can make what we have here within 10 or 15 miles in this comm
vilsack: i said i'm very focused on the local and i am. i would start on the local. i said i saw the world and this district through the lens of a teacher. i see my job much the way i would on the first day of school with all the promise that entails tails. and i would like at these counties as 39 separate entities as many different communities. i would want to make sure that i helped each of them maximize their potential by creating jobs. i have spent the last year-and-a-half laying out my...
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Oct 9, 2012
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it was on the internet until somebody, an islamist in egypt, translated it into arabic, played it on local television, and there is a plethora of uncontrolled television stations in egypt. and he brought in somebody to explain it and comment on it who engaged in whipping up frenzy against the christians in egypt and all of that. [inaudible] grabbed this issue in their own competition with the mainstream islamists. the leader of the country, who happens to be a pus -- muslim brother, mohamed morsi, used it also with the sell fates -- zell fates. so here you have the two main -- [inaudible] using this issue as a pretext, as an excuse in their ongoing political fight. it's a political issue. from the day eye tole ya khamenei issued that stupid fatwa against -- [inaudible] because he was in deep, dire trouble. when after the movie -- [inaudible] in lebanon organized hezbollah into organizing big campaign because he's in a very defensive position today. so he needed that pretext. the same thing in pakistan, the same thing in afghanistan. you know, talk about the stupid cartoons against the prop
it was on the internet until somebody, an islamist in egypt, translated it into arabic, played it on local television, and there is a plethora of uncontrolled television stations in egypt. and he brought in somebody to explain it and comment on it who engaged in whipping up frenzy against the christians in egypt and all of that. [inaudible] grabbed this issue in their own competition with the mainstream islamists. the leader of the country, who happens to be a pus -- muslim brother, mohamed...
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Oct 17, 2012
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what doesn't look like with the local population. when we -- finally we have great commanders and troopers on the ground who are refine tactics and adjusting tailoring the adjustment to the specific threat. as i look at the fight in afghanistan, i see two fights that we how we deal with. amounted fights and the second one is dismountedded and they have different threats and require different capability. the mounted fight is command wire there's a individual end of a wire when he sees a vehicle a specific vehicle cross in to the danger area. he'll detonate the ied. largely using cull voters they can pack more explosives per greative net explosive weight they can he defeat the vehicle improvement. -- we have not seen any explosively foreign projectile thelet l weapon we saw in iraq. but we're seeing large amounts of explosives with a command wire. i look at that as the enemy's precision guided munition. one of the critical enable we fielded in the fight. airborne sensors of all fight. advanced vehicle optics, predetonation, robot and v
what doesn't look like with the local population. when we -- finally we have great commanders and troopers on the ground who are refine tactics and adjusting tailoring the adjustment to the specific threat. as i look at the fight in afghanistan, i see two fights that we how we deal with. amounted fights and the second one is dismountedded and they have different threats and require different capability. the mounted fight is command wire there's a individual end of a wire when he sees a vehicle...
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Oct 25, 2012
10/12
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and that's up to the local governments. but we have cut law enforcement because of these deep budget cuts very deeply. the last two highway patrol schools have been canceled. we're training no troopers to come in. i think they lost around 200 positions. anything we do is an unfunded mandate, i would talk to the highway patrol, i would consider it. i'm not going to give you a definitive answer right now. >> mr. mccrory? mccrory: based upon the recent decisions of courts, and it's probably going to go all the way to the supreme court again regarding some of the details laws, i don't think it's needed at this point in time because let's wait until those are challenged. i do know this, that as a mayor and as a governor, i'm sworn not only to uphold the constitutions of north carolina, but i'm also sworn to uphold the constitution and laws of the united states of america. and as mayor, federal laws were enforced by our local police. and vice versa. if federal law enforcement officials saw something that was a local law being pas
and that's up to the local governments. but we have cut law enforcement because of these deep budget cuts very deeply. the last two highway patrol schools have been canceled. we're training no troopers to come in. i think they lost around 200 positions. anything we do is an unfunded mandate, i would talk to the highway patrol, i would consider it. i'm not going to give you a definitive answer right now. >> mr. mccrory? mccrory: based upon the recent decisions of courts, and it's probably...
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Oct 8, 2012
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., just before dinner, local mars time every day. the scientists arrived at work about three hours before, mid afternoon rover time. and they were ready to receive photographs and other analyses that were coming back from the rover's work during the day. so you see, the mers are solar powered, so they work roughly on a 9 to 5 schedule. every morning each rover would receive a new program for its day's work. so between dinner time on mars and sunrise, the scientists and engineers must finalize the plan for the next day. and in this requires a second shift of engineers who refine and test that program before it's sent to mars, what's called the uplink. now, if that weren't enough, keep in mind we were simultaneously operating two rovers on mars for over five years. spirit and opportunity were, in fact, two missions operating in parallel. they had their own meeting rooms, as i said, for science operations at jpl, they had their own engineering programming teams, 6 p.m. coordination meetings and their own cache, of course, of free ice cr
., just before dinner, local mars time every day. the scientists arrived at work about three hours before, mid afternoon rover time. and they were ready to receive photographs and other analyses that were coming back from the rover's work during the day. so you see, the mers are solar powered, so they work roughly on a 9 to 5 schedule. every morning each rover would receive a new program for its day's work. so between dinner time on mars and sunrise, the scientists and engineers must finalize...
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Oct 31, 2012
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and then the local paper just reported another after that he had had with the patient a decade ago. so this is a race where a couple of timely document dumps have really made what should be a competitive congress -- contest into something that is a close race. >> host: what about this president election, what could be that's already happened a possible october surprise? >> guest: i think we've seen to game changing moment so far in this presidential contest. i can tell you when mitt romney's video about the 47%, his comments from a fundraiser that can make him when that video came out, republicans across the country saw their poll numbers dropped three to five points almost overnight. is that people really scared that a democratic wave was developing. because of such a damaging comment. it went straight to the heart of the worst characters of the republican party. that really cause a dramatic change, not only in the down ballot races but also in the presidential contest. the race got so far apart there for just a little bit that it looked like some of the outside groups might decide
and then the local paper just reported another after that he had had with the patient a decade ago. so this is a race where a couple of timely document dumps have really made what should be a competitive congress -- contest into something that is a close race. >> host: what about this president election, what could be that's already happened a possible october surprise? >> guest: i think we've seen to game changing moment so far in this presidential contest. i can tell you when mitt...
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Oct 22, 2012
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once it has to move away from external alliance it is a local strategy because in the history of the marquee nobody's grown at eight to 10% based on the domestic demand. ain't going to happen, never happened in the past. so the question is it busta move -- if it goes to external demand it has to be a lower growth strategy so then there are two options. continue in the high investment strategy, or to move finally we from investment towards consumption. i think the politics of this is increasingly moving in favor of the rebalancing and the consumption strategy for the following reason. i think if china can continue to invest more in the strategy, more in balance is in the financial system, cheap credit, rising inequality because cheap credit means intensive, welfare and lower consumption to use a colliding that's what that strategy is. if it goes towards higher consumption, less quality, less equal become higher employment and higher consumption. now the question is why do i see the politics is meeting in that direction? i think one simple reason i think that because of the political c
once it has to move away from external alliance it is a local strategy because in the history of the marquee nobody's grown at eight to 10% based on the domestic demand. ain't going to happen, never happened in the past. so the question is it busta move -- if it goes to external demand it has to be a lower growth strategy so then there are two options. continue in the high investment strategy, or to move finally we from investment towards consumption. i think the politics of this is...
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Oct 10, 2012
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i was recently at my local gas station, asked a guy named joey, i said, joey, how much did it cost to fill your tank? you know what his answer was? he said, i don't know, joe, i never have enough money to do it. the middle class needs relief, tax relief, they need help now. the focus will change with barack obama. >> moderator: governor, please, if you want to respond to what he said about -- palin: i'd like to respond about the tax increases. you know, we can speak in agreement that darn right we need tax relief for americans so that jobs can be created here. now, barack obama and senator biden also voted for the largest tax increases in u.s. history. barack had 94 opportunities to side on the people's side and reduce taxes, and 94 times he voted to increase taxes or not support a tax reduction. 94 times. now, that's not what we need to create jobs and really bolster and heat up our economy. we do need the private sector to be able to keep more of what we earn and produce. government's going to have to learn to be more efficient and live with less if that's what it takes to rein in t
i was recently at my local gas station, asked a guy named joey, i said, joey, how much did it cost to fill your tank? you know what his answer was? he said, i don't know, joe, i never have enough money to do it. the middle class needs relief, tax relief, they need help now. the focus will change with barack obama. >> moderator: governor, please, if you want to respond to what he said about -- palin: i'd like to respond about the tax increases. you know, we can speak in agreement that darn...